0000000000424440

AUTHOR

Irmgard Amrein

showing 3 related works from this author

Loss of all three APP family members during development impairs synaptic function and plasticity, disrupts learning, and causes an autism-like phenot…

2021

The key role of APP for Alzheimer pathogenesis is well established. However, perinatal lethality of germline knockout mice lacking the entire APP family has so far precluded the analysis of its physiological functions for the developing and adult brain. Here, we generated conditional APP/APLP1/APLP2 triple KO (cTKO) mice lacking the APP family in excitatory forebrain neurons from embryonic day 11.5 onwards. NexCre cTKO mice showed altered brain morphology with agenesis of the corpus callosum and disrupted hippocampal lamination. Further, NexCre cTKOs revealed reduced basal synaptic transmission and drastically reduced long-term potentiation that was associated with reduced dendritic length …

Male10017 Institute of AnatomyLong-Term PotentiationHippocampal formationSynaptic TransmissionAmyloid beta-Protein Precursor0302 clinical medicine2400 General Immunology and MicrobiologyAmyloid precursor proteinMolecular Biology of DiseaseAutism spectrum disorderMice KnockoutNeurons0303 health sciencesbiologyBehavior AnimalGeneral NeuroscienceBrain2800 General NeuroscienceLong-term potentiationArticlesPhenotype10076 Center for Integrative Human PhysiologyKnockout mouseFemalelearning and memory610 Medicine & healthGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticle03 medical and health sciencesProsencephalon1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologymental disorders1312 Molecular BiologyAnimalsLearningAPLP1Autistic DisorderSocial BehaviorMolecular BiologyAPLP2CA1 Region Hippocampal030304 developmental biologysynaptic plasticityGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyAmyloid precursor proteinSynaptic plasticityForebrainSynapsesbiology.proteinAlzheimer570 Life sciences; biologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceThe EMBO journal
researchProduct

Author response: Phylogenetic variation in cortical layer II immature neuron reservoir of mammals

2020

Immature neuronVariation (linguistics)Phylogenetic treeEvolutionary biologyLayer (object-oriented design)Biology
researchProduct

Phylogenetic variation in cortical layer II immature neuron reservoir of mammals

2020

The adult mammalian brain is mainly composed of mature neurons. A limited amount of stem cell-driven neurogenesis persists in postnatal life and is reduced in large-brained species. Another source of immature neurons in adult brains is cortical layer II. These cortical immature neurons (cINs) retain developmentally undifferentiated states in adulthood, though they are generated before birth. Here, the occurrence, distribution and cellular features of cINs were systematically studied in 12 diverse mammalian species spanning from small-lissencephalic to large-gyrencephalic brains. In spite of well-preserved morphological and molecular features, the distribution of cINs was highly heterogeneou…

0301 basic medicineimmature neurons10017 Institute of AnatomyQH301-705.5Science610 Medicine & healthGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyneuroscience03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinedoublecortin1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology2400 General Immunology and MicrobiologyneocortexmedicinemammalsBiology (General)brain size; doublecortin; immature neurons; mammals; neocortex; neuroscienceImmature neuronNeocortexGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyPhylogenetic treeGeneral NeuroscienceQNeurogenesisR2800 General NeuroscienceGeneral MedicineMammalian brainDoublecortin030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurebrain sizeCerebral cortexBrain sizebiology.proteinMedicine570 Life sciences; biologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryeLife
researchProduct